Contents

Cape – biography[edit]

Early years[edit]

Jonathan Cape in the late 1950s

Cape was born in London on 15 November 1879, the youngest of the seven children of Jonathan Cape, a clerk from Ireby in what is now Cumbria, and his wife Caroline, née Page.[1][2] He received a basic schooling and in his early teens he was taken on by Hatchards bookshop in Piccadilly as an errand-boy. Four years later, in 1899, he joined the London office of the American publishers Harper and Brothers, where he worked, successively, as clerk, general utility man and travelling salesman, first in the provinces and later in London.[1][2] In 1904 he joined the publishing house of Duckworth as London traveller, and from 1911 as manager.[2] In 1914, on the outbreak of the First World War, he took over the sole charge of the business when the proprietor, Gerald Duckworth, was absent on war duties. In 1915 Duckworth returned, and in December of that year Cape joined the army, serving for the rest of the war.[3]

Cape returned to Duckworth in 1918. In 1920 he was appointed manager of the Medici Society, known mainly for publishing prints of paintings but with a small list of books.[2] While in this post he met George Wren Howard, fourteen years his junior, who was learning the publishing trade at the Medici Society. Cape's biographer (and sometime junior partner) Rupert Hart-Davis writes:

Cape quickly saw that Howard had a fine sense of design in book production, as well as a good business head; the two became friends and allies. After some months they decided that there was no future for them where they were, and that they had better start a new firm of their own.

Independent publisher[edit]

Howard was able to raise money from his family. Cape, with no such option, raised his share of the starting capital by selling cheap paperback reprints of novels by Elinor Glyn. Duckworth held the rights to her books, but did not wish to issue cut-price editions; Cape negotiated the rights in early 1920 and successfully issued the paperbacks under the imprint Page & Co.[4] With just enough starting capital the firm of Jonathan Cape began trading on 1 January 1921 at 11 Gower Street, Bloomsbury.

Cape and Howard recruited Edward Garnett as their editor and reader. Garnett, described by The Times as "the prince of publisher's readers", remained with the firm until his death in 1937.[1] Each of the three principals brought his own contribution to the firm's success: Cape was experienced in publishing; Howard ensured high quality design and production; and Garnett was given the freedom to foster talent and build up a fine publishing list. Hart-Davis credits Garnett's literary judgment and Howard's production with gaining the firm an "outstanding reputation for quality during the next two decades".[2]

The firm's first publication was widely regarded as a gamble: Cape published a new two-volume edition, at the high price of nine guineas, of C M Doughty's Travels in Arabia Deserta. The book, first published in 1888 with no success, had been out of print for thirty years. The Cape edition sold out and had to be reprinted several times. Among those who admired it was T E Lawrence, who became friendly with Cape, and wrote an introduction to the firm's 1926 single-volume edition of the book.[5] Jonathan Cape Ltd became Lawrence's publishers, issuing Revolt in the Desert (1927), Seven Pillars of Wisdom (1935) and The Mint (1955).[2]

Cape was three times married and three times widowed. In 1907 he married Edith Louisa Creak, with whom he had two daughters; Edith Cape died in 1919. In 1927 Cape married Olyve Vida James, with whom he had a son and a daughter; Olyve Cape died in 1931. In 1941 he married Kathleen Mary Webb, with whom he had a son; Kathleen Cape died in 1953.[2]

Cape suffered two strokes in 1954, which impaired his speech, but he fought his way back to health, and was still running the firm when he celebrated his eightieth birthday in November 1959. He died suddenly at his London flat three months later.[1] He was buried at Petersham, Surrey.[6]

The firm after Cape[edit]

As the 1960s progressed, the firm successfully courted and published authors who were representative of the age, including the Beatle John Lennon,[7] and the former "angry young man" Kingsley Amis.[8] Cape also signed up Len Deighton, whose series of spy novels was a gritty alternative to the far-fetched adventures of James Bond.[9] In the 1970s, Cape published popular authors in many genres, including the novelists J G Ballard and Salman Rushdie, and the children's writer Roald Dahl.